A collection of top water news from around California and the West compiled each weekday. Send any comments or article submissions to Foundation News & Publications Director Chris Bowman.
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More than a year after floods devastated the small town of
Woodlake in Tulare County, residents finally feel hopeful about
the future thanks to new infrastructure projects and an ongoing
lawsuit they are bringing against local governments and other
agencies. In March of 2023, homes in northwest Woodlake
were hit with floods after historic storms and snowpack brought
a deluge onto the valley floor. It took many residents months
and tens of thousands of dollars to repair their homes.
Residents banded together and took legal action against what
they said was a government failure to properly prepare and
respond to the floods.
Arizona Democrats are looking to capture voters mindful of one
resource that is sparse in the desert state: water. As
political battles over abortion and the southern border hit
close to home for some Arizonans, record-setting
high-temperature summers and droughts worry many. Democrats
look to rein in rural voters who have turned on the party by
framing water as a “life or death” matter going into the 2024
elections. … In tandem, Mayes and Gov. Katie Hobbs
(D-AZ) have cracked down on controversial farms that
had unlimited access to the state’s limited groundwater
supply. Last year, the pair ended a contract with a Saudi
Arabian company, Fondomonte, that grew alfalfa in Arizona and
then shipped the hay back to the Middle East. Under the
contract from former Republican Gov. Doug Ducey, the company
was given unlimited access to groundwater in Arizona.
Every year on April 22, we celebrate Earth Day, which
originally started in the 1970s with a focus on recycling,
using less electricity, and conserving water. Fast forward to
today, Earth Day has become so much more and is everything from
mitigating the impacts of climate change to environmental
justice. For environmental scientists like me, doing research
in various ecosystems on all sorts of species, every day can
begin to feel like Earth Day. After all, in the Sacramento-San
Joaquin Delta, we are doing everything we can to improve our
corner of the world.
On April 23, during the administrative public hearing of the
Board of Mesa County Commissioners, they approved a
million-dollar contribution toward the permanent protection of
the most senior, non-consumptive water right on the Colorado
River — the Shoshone water rights. “Mesa County’s $1 million
investment in the Shoshone water rights is not just a financial
commitment, but a pledge to our community’s future,” said
Bobbie Daniel, Chair of the Board of Mesa County Commissioners.
“By safeguarding these rights, Mesa County ensures that the
West Slope’s lifeblood — our beloved Colorado River — continues
to sustain our families, farms, and natural habitats. …”
Fresno State is introducing a groundbreaking new minor, in
collaboration with the California Water Institute, focusing on
multiple facets of the water industry for students to add to
their educational plan. … This new water minor is designed
for students who want to learn more about water systems in
California, as well as those interested in water-related
careers after graduation. The minor is open to all disciplines
at Fresno State and allows students of any study background to
learn more about the water management challenges that impact a
reliable water supply.
As it does every year, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (FWS)
will be evaluating plant and animal species to determine which
ones deserve federal protection under the Endangered Species
Act. About half of the species chosen for analysis so far in
2024 have something in common: Their futures depend on the
conservation of wetlands. A mere coincidence? Probably
not. While wetlands cover just 6 percent of the earth’s
land surface area, they provide habitat for a whopping 40
percent of plants and animals. In all likelihood, we can
expect this trend of wetland-dependent species coming under the
protection of the Endangered Species Act to continue, predicts
Amy McNamara, a freshwater ecosystems strategist for NRDC. But
this, she says, “is something that we should work to avoid at
all costs.”
Atmospheric river storms are like punches in a boxing match. A
flurry of weak ones are OK. But it’s best to avoid the big
knockout blows. That’s exactly what happened in California this
winter. Scientists say that from Oct. 1 to April 1, the state
actually received more atmospheric rivers, the famous
moisture-laden meteorological events that are critical to the
water supply, than it did last year — 44 this winter compared
to 31 last winter. But the intensity made all the difference.
Statewide, California had just 2 strong atmospheric rivers this
winter, compared with 7 last year. Many of the biggest this
winter hit Washington and Oregon instead. The result was, for
the most part, a remarkably, blissfully average rainy season
for California. 3 were moderate and 7 were strong. This year,
26 were weak, 16 were moderate and 2 were strong.
With San Diego more than half done with the first phase of its
Pure Water sewage recycling system, city officials say they are
considering major changes to how they will handle the second,
larger phase. … Plans for the second phase, which were
mostly put in place 13 years ago, could change significantly
based on new state regulations and new information about how
much purified water the city is projected to need. … But
the city could abandon a plan to build the phase two
purification plant on a vacant 17-acre site in Mission Valley,
and plans to store purified water from that plant in either
Lake Murray or the San Vicente Reservoir.
After a decade in the works, California is getting a new state
park this summer. Dos Rios Ranch, a 1,600-acre plot west of
Modesto where the San Joaquin and Tuolumne rivers converge, has
long been slated to become the next state park. On Monday, the
Department of Parks and Recreation announced it would open June
12. … Department of Parks and Recreation Director
Armando Quintero has characterized Dos Rios as a needed
public investment in a “a park-poor region.” The site for
Dos Rios was donated by the Chico conservation group River
Partners, which spent $40 million restoring the
area from its previous incarnation as a dairy farm to its
more natural state as a floodplain, a transition that state
leaders have touted as climate-resilient. In Monday’s
announcement, Gov. Gavin Newsom called the Dos Rios restoration
“a key asset to fighting the climate crisis.”
Our popular water maps don the office walls of many in the
water world, and our Layperson’s Guides are the go-to
resource for impartial overviews of key water topics and
landmarks across California and the Southwest. In recognition
of Earth Day on Monday and National Environmental Education
Week, we’re offering a 20 percent discount through
April 27 on these educational products: Maps &
Posters, Layperson’s Guides:
Discount code NEEW2024 Map
& Guide Bundles: Discount code
NEEW2024-Bundles. Our book, Water & the
Shaping of California: Discount code:
NEEW2024-Book Take advantage of our discounted prices today!
Sale ends Saturday!
Southern California’s rivers and creeks once teemed with large,
silvery fish that arrived from the ocean and swam upstream to
spawn. But today, these fish are seldom seen. Southern
California steelhead trout have been pushed to the brink of
extinction as their river habitats have been altered by
development and fragmented by barriers and dams. Their numbers
have been declining for decades, and last week California’s
Fish and Game Commission voted to list Southern California
steelhead trout as endangered. Conservation advocates said they
hope the designation will accelerate efforts to save the fish
and the aquatic ecosystems on which they depend.
For the past two years, Mt. Shasta has emerged from winter
covered in thick blankets of white snow that conceal what
decades of drought have done to the Northern California
mountain’s ancient glaciers. The seasonal snows come and go on
the 14,179-foot peak. For hundreds of years, the glaciers have
clung to the mountain’s steep slopes, slowly changing and
moving over time. But for the past few decades, droughts and
periods of abnormally warm weather have caused the glaciers to
shrink. Scientists have studied the glaciers and documented
their demise as climate change — with its warmer temperatures
and dearth of snow — has slowly caused Mt. Shasta’s glacial
masses to dwindle, especially during the 2020-22 drought.
Long before rising seas wash over San Francisco’s shores and
flood its streets, rising groundwater mixed with salt water
from the bay could touch and degrade underground structures
like sewage lines and building foundations. … That’s the
implication of a study released this week by
scientists at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. They compiled
research from around the globe showing that as sea levels rise,
coastal groundwater is lifted closer to the surface while also
becoming saltier, more corrosive and potentially more
destructive to subterranean systems. … Habel’s
publication aligns with a growing body of data from Bay Area
researchers and others about the risks posed by rising
groundwater as sea levels are projected to rise …
More people will be cooling off in the waterways as the
temperatures warm up. However, safety officials have a warning.
Officials are calling on people to wear a life jacket on the
river, use heavy duty rafts or raft rentals, be careful of
hidden objects in the river and avoid getting hypothermia as
the river runs colder. “We are fully prepared and fully
staffed for whatever happens,” said Battalion Chief Parker
Wilbourn, with the Sacramento Metropolitan Fire
District. Mostly small crowds enjoyed the American River
this weekend. However as the weather warms up, Wilbourn knows
the crowds will only get bigger, and it’s important to listen
to your body.
Since the first Earth Day in 1970, the world has experienced
profound ecological changes. Wildlife populations have
decreased by 69 percent, the result of habitat loss caused by
rapid industrialization and changing temperatures. 2023 was the
hottest year on record. Certain ancient practices could
mitigate the deleterious effects of global warming. From
building seaside gardens to water management in desert terrain,
these time-honored practices work with the natural world’s
rhythms.
Plastic bottles, sports balls, and what look like the wheels
from a toy pram float down the San Pedro River that runs
through Quito, Ecuador. They are on their way towards the
Pacific Ocean, on a downstream journey repeated all over the
world as plastic waste is flushed through rivers into the seas.
However, this particular patch of plastic waste is about to
have its journey cut short. It is brought to a stop by a
floating barrier in the water, part of a local plastic clean-up
technology called the Azure system, which collects plastic from
rivers.
When PG&E announced that it would remove Scott and Cape
Horn dams on the Eel River as part of the Potter Valley
hydroelectric project decommissioning, it put a continuing
water diversion to the Russian River in question. A Press
Democrat editorial praised Eel and Russian River stakeholders
coming together to endorse the possibility of a new fish
friendly diversion from the Eel River (“Progress toward water
security,” March 27), and we at Russian Riverkeeper concur.
However, a continued diversion from the Eel River is not a
solution in and of itself when it comes to ensuring long-term
water reliability in the upper Russian River watershed. A
continued diversion will not solve all the region’s water
issues. -Written by Don McEnhill and Ed Burdett, both with the
Russian Riverkeeper.
Kari Lake’s recent op-ed in the Star set forth her platform for
the “most urgent issue” facing Arizona and the Southwest:
water. I agree, which is why it’s so disappointing that she has
so little to offer. Let’s unpack her three main
ideas. -Written by Robert Glennon, Regents Professor
Emeritus at the University of Arizona College of Law and author
of Unquenchable: America’s Water Crisis and What To Do About
it.
In one of the biggest rollbacks of the Clean Water Act since
its inception five decades ago, the U.S. Supreme Court last
year abolished protections for tens of thousands of acres of
wetlands in Colorado. And unless the state legislature passes a
measure to create a permitting plan and restore the protections
that existed before the Supreme Court’s decision, Grand
County’s waterways are at risk. In every area of the state,
Colorado’s wetlands lacking a permanent surface flow – along
with intermittent streams that run seasonally and ephemeral
streams that only flow in response to rain or snow – are in
jeopardy. In essence, the ruling means wetlands that were
previously protected can now be filled, paved over and
destroyed with impunity. -Written by Kirk Klanke, Colorado Headwaters
Chapter of Trout Unlimited.